Remember, Remember

About 3 years ago, I was gifted a 1-year membership to audible.com. I have renewed my membership every year since because I discovered the joy of “reading” again. I could “read” (ok, listen!) while folding laundry, driving down the road, cooking dinner, or washing dishes. I got my kids hooked too. They LOVE audiobooks!

One of the genres I’ve become addicted to is biography. Biographies are a fascinating way to discover history because the reader can view major events through the lens of an individual life. The reader gains a birds-eye view of the way circumstances and choices change the course of lives, and sometimes, the course of history.

Last week, I finished American Ulysses: A Life of Ulysses S. Grant by Ronald C. White.My paltry (and often slanted) U.S. History education typically brushed over Grant. We hit the antics of Gould and Fisk, learned of him as Robert E. Lee’s nemesis, and mentioned him as the president who followed the roguish Andrew Johnson.

This biography was eye-opening.

I did not know that Grant was a West Point graduate who had participated in the Mexican-American War and garnered a love for this country to the south. He had to leave the army under less than honorable circumstances and was recalled to service at the outbreak of secession that led to the Civil War. He is the reason the olive branch of reconstruction was extended to the South and he fought vigorously against racism. He was hailed by Frederick Douglass in this statement: “To [Grant] more than any other man the negro owes his enfranchisement, and the Indian a humane policy. In the matter of the protection of the freedman from violence, his moral courage surpassed that of his party…”

As a nation, we owe his memory a greater debt than five seconds in an Animaniacs song or a cursory glance on our fifty-dollar bill. In fact, we would have less of the nonsense we see today if we knew the cost of what we have now.

We have forgotten.

We have forgotten the more than 618,222 deaths (new studies estimate the toll to be around 750,000) that equated to roughly 2% of the U.S. Population at that time.

We have forgotten the cost of maintaining our union.

We have lost our focus.

Today, we remember another, more recent event—one that changed the course of our nation.

I still remember what life was like on September 10, 2001 and I have witnessed the change in our nation since September 11, 2001. Today, as I walked the kids to school, flags slowly appeared around the neighborhood. My daughter asked, “Why is everyone putting out their flags?”

In her defense, she had forgotten the date.

In the brief time we had, I reminded my three kids what we remember today:

We remember the 2,996 dead and 6,000 wounded from the two planes that struck the World Trade Center in New York, the plane that struck the Pentagon, and the final plane that crashed in Pennsylvania.

We remember the men and women who saved lives at the cost of their own.

We remember the flag rising above the rubble, and the flags that went up across the country, in a show of compassion and unity.

We remember the soldiers who fought and died to track down the masterminds of this cowardly attack. (Many remain in harm’s way.)

We remember—as we should every day—that life is precious, fragile, and fleeting.

We remember that someday, we will be called to home that no terrorist can invade.

Today, we remember a day of both darkness and light—the darkness of hate, and the light of self-sacrifice.

As a Christian, we need to take time each day to remember the cost of our freedom and fix our eyes on the home that awaits us on the other side.

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Published by Elihu

Elihu Anderson is a California refugee currently thriving on the West Texas plains. She is the founder of elihuscorner.com and is a contributor to Kirk Cameron's website TheCourage.com. When she isn't writing, reading, or teaching, she is sipping on some iced homemade chai and enjoying time with a good friend. Come by and say hi at elihuscorner.com or visit me on Facebook.com/elihuscorner
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Sister Anderson, this is a great article. We NEED these reminders. Saw the post over on Brother Bruce R. Mills site and had to come on over and reply.
You wrote in closing, “As a Christian, we need to take time each day to remember the cost of our freedom and fix our eyes on the home that awaits us on the other side.”
As a Christian we remember that it was Jesus who died for our ETERNAL freedom. Sadly, when it comes to Free-dom, either in the natural OR the spiritual the cost is never free, but requires lives!
God bless you continually and abundantly!

Thanks, Roland! I’ve been reading in Deuteronomy over the past few weeks and Moses insistently urges the Israelites to remember what God has done for them. As Christians, we have to commit the memory of Jesus’ sacrifice to our hearts daily lest we forget.

For the record, I am a woman—I just have a male nom de plume. When I started writing, my husband was in law enforcement, and online anonymity was strongly recommended. I apologize for any confusion.

I thought you were and I’m not sure where I read it, But Brother Bruce tried to correct me. Sorry for the mix-up. Both my sons were involved in law enforcement so I understand. I have a grandson who’s Army Military Police so service runs in the family! God bless, Sis!

Thank you, Beckie! So often I get in the rut of obsessing over trifling issues and missing the big picture. That’s why being in the Word daily is so important—it helps us remember. I’m in Deuteronomy at the moment and Moses is pleading insistently with the people to remember so they don’t fall. I wish our country could do the same…